With inflation broadening, Lagarde said this week that the ECB's
minus 0.5% deposit rate should start rising in July and could be
at zero or "slightly above" by the end of September before
rising further "towards the neutral rate".
Dutch central bank chief Klaas Knot, among the most conservative
members of the ECB's Governing Council said he fully backed this
plan and Olli Rehn, Finland's central bank chief, also voiced
support for rate hikes in the summer, as did the ECB's own chief
economist Philip Lane.
"I'm fully on board, I fully support everything that is in the (Lagarde)
blog, I think it nicely charts the policy course," Knot told a
World Economic Forum panel in Davos.
Knot earlier said that a 50 basis point rate hike in July should
remain a possibility but his comments on Wednesday suggest
support for smaller, 25 basis point moves, in line with
Lagarde's call for gradualism.
Speaking in Helsinki, Rehn, considered by some to be a policy
"dove" who favours lower rates, said he also supported 25 point
rate hikes in both July and September.
Lane said the rate hike path sketched by Lagarde for the summer
was "clear and robust" but he cautioned that any move beyond
September will depend on how inflation pans out and the impacts
of the war in Ukraine.
Earlier this week, the central bank governors of Austria and
Latvia both said that a 50 basis point rate hike should be an
option in July, indicating that a 25 basis point increase is not
yet a done deal.
Fabio Panetta, an outspoken dove, took a somewhat different
view, arguing that policy normalisation should not be equated
with getting interest rates back to a neutral setting. Instead,
he said the aim should be to cement the inflation at the ECB's
2% target.
"Normal does not mean neutral... the normalisation process
should not be assessed against unobservable reference points,
such as the natural or neutral rate of interest," Panetta said
in a speech in Frankfurt.
Others, including French central bank chief Francois Villeroy de
Galhau, an influential centrist voice, have also argued that the
neutral rate is a key reference point in policy normalisation.
The nominal neutral rate is estimated to be between 1% and 2%,
or 150 to 250 basis points above the current minus 0.5% deposit
rate, suggesting that the ECB could raise rates well into next
year before approaching this level.
Backing up his argument for caution, Panetta also said that the
growth outlook is clearly weakening, a view Rehn appeared so
share when he said the ECB was likely to cut its growth
projection next month.
(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa; Editing by
Toby Chopra and Catherine Evans)
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